The idea leading his viewers on a paper-chase seems a little unconvincing as it goes against Lynch's usual habit of letting his work stand alone. I think you have to consider the fact that Lynch was pressured to come up with these clues by the French production company that was losing millions. When these were released the film was a disaster financially and the general buzz at that time was there was no plot to figure out. I think the clues are important and relevant but not necessarily the 10 clues Lynch would really give if he wanted us to figure out what his exact intentions were. He had said before these were released and after they were released that he would never reveal what MD meant to him, it was up to everyone to have their own vision. — richdubbya
While avoiding a detailed deconstruction, David Lynch has given some clues to the interpretation of Mulholland Drive, both to the sequence of events and the underlying meaning. On the back cover of the Mulholland Drive video, he describes the film as follows:
- Act 1: She found herself the perfect mystery
- Act 2: A sad illusion
- Act 3: Love
The perfect mystery presumably refers to Rita's identity, and 'she' is Betty — but note the ambiguous words Lynch chose — "she found herself", rather than "she found" — it could be read "she found herself to be the perfect mystery". The mystery could refer to Betty's real identity, as well as to Rita's.
Act 2 begins when Rita wakes up crying "Silencio". The sad illusion is show business, and also perhaps the unreciprocated love of Betty for Rita. Act 3 begins when Diane awakes; it shows Diane's abiding love for Camilla, in the face of Camilla's rejection, and her unwillingness to permit a world in which she and Camilla are apart. — bunter